SOLUTIONS OF METALS IN NON-METALLIC SOLVENTS; III.1 THE

SOLUTIONS OF METALS IN NON-METALLIC SOLVENTS; III.1 THE APPARENT MOLECULAR WEIGHT OF SODIUM ... Charles A. Kraus ... E. Charles Evers...
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VOL.

xxx.

AUGUST,1908.

KO. 8.

THE JOURNAL OF THE

American Chemical Society RESEARCH L l B O R A T O R Y OF PHYSICAL CHEDIISTRY OF MASSACHUSETTS ISSTITCTE OF TECHNOLOGY. N O . 30.1

[CONTRIBUTIOSS FROX THE

THE

SOLUTIONS OF METALS IN NON-METALLIC SOLVENTS; 111.’ THE APPARENT MOLECULAR WEIGHT OF SODIUM DISSOLVED IN LIQUID AMMONIA, RY CHARLES A. K R A G S . Received June 15) 1g0S.

Introduction. The earliest determinations of the molecular weight of metals in ammonia are due t o Joannis,? who investigated solutions of both sodium and potassium. His method consisted essentially in determining the change in the vapor pressure of the solvent on addition of a known quantity of metal. From these data he calculated the molecular weight by means of Raoult’s law. Of the two determinations made with sodium the pressure change was observed directly in one case, while in the other case the boiling point of the solution under atmospheric pressure was determined, and the pressure of the pure solvent was found by interpolation from its vapor pressure-temperature curve. There is some doubt as to this latter measurement because the boiling point of ammonia was assumed to be -38.z0, whereas the true boiling point of ammonia is -33.46°.3 Since the results of Joannis are rendered doubtful by the application of Raoult’s law t o solutions of very high concentration, i t is unnecessary to discuss here the experimental errors to which they Previous papers of this series have appeared as follows: I. “General ProperJOURNAL, 29, I j57-I 5 7 1 (1907); ties of Solutions of Metals in Liquid Ammonia.” THIS 11. “On the Formation of Compounds between Metals and Ammonia.” Ihid., 30, 653-668 (1908). * Compt. rend., 115, 820 (1892);Ann. chim. phys., 7, 35 (1906). Gibhs, Tms TOI.RN.AL, 27, 8 j r (1905);Franklin, Ann. Physik, 24, 367 ( 1 9 0 7 ) .

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are subject. The most dilute solutions measured were approximately 3.69 and 3.76 normal with respect to sodium and potassium, respectively, while the composition of one sodium solution was as high as one atom of metal per ,